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TW. Taylor Wimpey Plc

158.90
2.40 (1.53%)
26 Jul 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Taylor Wimpey Plc LSE:TW. London Ordinary Share GB0008782301 ORD 1P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  2.40 1.53% 158.90 159.45 159.60 159.90 156.25 156.70 20,596,384 16:35:24
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Gen Contr-single-family Home 3.51B 349M 0.0987 16.16 5.53B
Taylor Wimpey Plc is listed in the Gen Contr-single-family Home sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker TW.. The last closing price for Taylor Wimpey was 156.50p. Over the last year, Taylor Wimpey shares have traded in a share price range of 102.30p to 159.90p.

Taylor Wimpey currently has 3,536,669,600 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Taylor Wimpey is £5.53 billion. Taylor Wimpey has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 16.16.

Taylor Wimpey Share Discussion Threads

Showing 25851 to 25866 of 46875 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
28/3/2020
15:36
OMG


Fitch rating agency
The rating agency, which also put the UK on a “negative outlook”, added that it took into account “the deep near-term damage to the UK economy caused by the coronavirus outbreak and the lingering uncertainty regarding the post-Brexit UK-EU trade relationship”

1 nhs
28/3/2020
15:26
Steeplejack,

You are nearly correct about Weimar Germany.

Weimar Germany even issued a Trillion Mark note! Inflation was that bad in Weimar Germany that Husbands that went to work that their wifes collected their wages twice a day with a wheelbarrow!

turvart
28/3/2020
15:25
It was from another.

That’s fine if your got the cash

One problem

The U.K. has not

1 nhs
28/3/2020
12:01
Your watching your company turn assets into liabilities.

Just like the virus, they can’t move fast enough .

The smart large house builder, will slash prices by 15%, and grab what little market their is.

1 nhs
28/3/2020
11:28
I agree will not respond to 1NHS again
gaygay3
28/3/2020
10:49
Why do people here give attention to the troll. He lives for a response. Just filter him and he will eventually get bored when nobody responds and will then go away.
masurenguy
28/3/2020
09:21
Gaygay3


Read my blog it has articles, by others, from all around the world.

1 nhs
28/3/2020
09:13
1NHS
stop watching TV and reading to many papers and buy some TW Shares

gaygay3
28/3/2020
08:50
Thanks.

From another


smartie628 Mar '20 - 07:57 - 155449 of 155450
0 1 0
Pure madness. Banks will need the capital buffers. They cannot afford to pay dividends at this stage. They will also need government support at some stage and they need to be seen as acting with a moral compass. That said dividends are the least of the banks concerns with default rates set to rise.

Before this we had 8% zombie businesses in the U.K. On day one we’re looking at losing a further 4%m for you who can’t add up that’s 12%. Significant default rate.

Added to this that many SMEs will need to prepare forward looking cash flows as well as P&Ls forecasts, in which many won’t have a clue, plus inability to source an Accountant to assist, access to bridging loans will be shear impossible. What you have to remember the principles of lending do not disappear or fall away over night. Realistic cash flows and serviceability will be subject to stringent testing. Delays assured, plus where are banks going to get the extra experienced lending staff to look at lending propositions and turn these around. You’re looking at months before a business will be able to look and gain access to, if at all, to cash. Could be seeing business failures running at 25% by then. Remember we still don’t know how long this partial lockdown lasts. We’ve yet to go to full lockdown!!!!

DYOR, but would I personally invest in this market for the next 6months with false bottoms after false bottoms assured, no, not for me.

Once again do your own research, and when assessing access to bridging loans think about the principles of lending, time frame, and basic requirements for a business lending proposition to be assessed.

1 nhs
28/3/2020
08:46
NHS fair's fair, you called the stock markets reaction to covid perfectly. I thank you for spurring me to sell my HBs and brickmakers after satisfying myself that they were not really going to suffer in a brief downturn. Thanks mate you saved me a fortune, now the buying back in is proving a challenge. I took some RDW at 670p!!
purplepelmets
28/3/2020
08:42
OMG

AS PREDICTED


Mortgage market frozen. Most offers being withdrawn.
Transactions are collapsing.
Daily Telegraph reports today on the reality.

We all have to get up to speed here, the financial system is in meltdown.
Maybe capitulation the stock market will happen when the new unemployment figures are published.

The FTSE100 index is still over 5000. during the crashes of 2003/2009 it fell to 3500.
And this feels much more serious.

I see even the bigger football club are in trouble.
Huge wage bills for their top players which they must pay.
Zero income.

1 nhs
27/3/2020
21:55
Jug, I respect all views, irrespective of where the share price is heading.
Your post was only yesterday so hardly going back far... Don't panic, stalking isn't a hobby of mine! ;)

wfl1970
27/3/2020
21:48
Been on the beer jug
asa8
27/3/2020
20:26
Get the name right jugears problem is no one can afford them I think over half of new builds last year were on help to buy in London it was higher, big problem coming with help to buy don’t forget the government has second charge if the houses tank 25% most people will just chuck the keys back
asa8
27/3/2020
20:11
Spot on Alan
jugears
27/3/2020
20:09
NHS 1 almost I am 81 years old ,sixty years of trading so I know a fair bit ,I’ve lived through many peaks and troughs and I find by being patient it always comes right in the end however long ,
alangriffbang
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